The original 10-part series chronicled a decade in the life of Steven Avery, a Manitowoc County, Wisconsin man who was wrongly convicted for a sexual assault and later convicted along with his nephew Brendan Dassey for murdering photographer Teresa Halbach.

Since their convictions, both Avery and Dassey have gotten new legal representation and are pursuing post-conviction relief. Appearing on "Chicago Tonight" in January, Dassey’s attorney Steven Drizin described his first impressions of his client.

“My initial impression was this was a young man with severe disabilities who was taken advantage of by just about everybody in the system, starting with the police officers who interrogated him in a way that preyed on his vulnerabilities and resulted in a coerced and probably false confession; then his own lawyer who announced to the public that he was morally and legally responsible for the crime before he had met with Brendan,” said Drizin, a staff attorney with Northwestern University’s Center of Wrongful Convictions.

The filmmakers responsible for the original 10 episodes, Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, will be returning for the new installments. “The viewers’ interest and attention has ensured that the story is not over, and we are fully committed to continuing to document events as they unfold,” Demos and Ricciardi said in a statement.

According to Netflix, the new episodes are currently in production. The company did not say how many episodes will be released or when they will become available.